China may refrain from stepping up its monetary stimulus or increasing spending because measures now in place are sufficient to support growth, the International Monetary Fundâs top official in the nation said.
Authorities will probably maintain the âstatus quoâ after already shifting their monetary stance to a âmore neutral or accommodating oneâ and may forgo expanding this yearâs budget, Il Houng Lee, 54, the IMFâs senior resident representative in China, said in an interview yesterday in the fundâs Beijing office.
Leeâs comments reflect confidence at the IMF, which last week cut its China growth forecasts three months after releasing updated projections, that the pace of expansion will accelerate in the second half of 2012. Premier Wen Jiabaoâs government enacted two interest-rate cuts in a month and accelerated approval of investment plans to stem six quarters of deceleration in the worldâs second-largest economy.
âBroadly what they have been doing has already been adequate to ensure that the economy is bottoming out,â said Lee, head of the IMFâs China office since 2010. âThey most likely maintain the current status quo,â he predicted. Authorities âwill most likely allow credit growth to continue to increase,â while avoiding the record scale of lending in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, Lee said.
Rate Cut
The IMF official didnât rule out another rate cut, saying a drop in the inflation rate could prompt such a move. Meantime, the government sees âadequate space in the existing budget to continue to adjust policies to support growth,â assuming Europeâs debt crisis doesnât worsen, he said. Revenue may come in above projections, allowing higher spending, he said.
The IMF issued an annual review late on July 24, saying that while Chinaâs economy âseems to be undergoing a soft landing,â achieving that is a key challenge. âChina is well placed to respond forcefully, if needed, to a deterioration of the external environment, in particular through fiscal policy,â the Washington-based lender said.
The fund repeated its forecast from last week that Chinaâs economy will expand 8 percent in 2012, compared with the 8.2 percent seen in April. It sees an acceleration to 8.5 percent growth in 2013, compared with 8.8 percent predicted three months ago. Inflation will range from 3 percent to 3.5 percent for the year and slow to 2.5 percent to 3 percent in 2013, âbarring further shocks to agricultural supply,â the IMF said.
Leaders have implemented stimulus as the Communist Party prepares for a once-a-decade leadership succession, starting later this year.
Political Dynamics
âOur baseline scenario assumes no disruptionâ from the leadership shift, Lee said. Asked if domestic or foreign investment decisions are being postponed, Lee said that he âwould have thought that uncertainties in the global economy were much larger than the uncertainty, if any, over the political risks here.â
The IMF on July 24 reiterated its assessment that the yuan is âmoderatelyâ undervalued, which China disputed. The fund omitted an estimated range for the currencyâs undervaluation that was included in an earlier draft, according to two officials at the fund who had seen the previous language and spoke on condition of anonymity.
With a slowdown in export growth, China has overseen a weakening in the yuan this year. The currency has dropped about 1.4 percent against the dollar in 2012 after a 4.7 percent gain in 2011. The yuan fell less than 0.1 percent against the dollar to 6.3885 yesterday.
Yuan Policy
The yuan âis assessed to be moderately undervalued against a broad basket of currencies,â the IMF staff wrote, reiterating an assessment last month by David Lipton, the IMFâs first deputy managing director. That was a change from the previous stance that the currency was âsubstantiallyâ undervalued.
China said the yuan was ânow close to equilibrium or, at most, slightly undervalued,â according to the report.
Markus Rodlauer, head of the IMFâs China team, asked why estimates of the yuanâs undervaluations were left out this year, said on a conference call with reporters that ânumbers tend to get a life of their own.â Some estimates will appear in a separate exchange-rate report to be issued âshortly,â he said. Last yearâs report gave a range of 3 percent to 23 percent for the undervaluation.
Bill Murray, an IMF spokesman, declined to comment on the omission of the yuanâs estimated undervaluation that was in an earlier draft.
âSignificantâ Risks
IMF directors ânoted that the pace of activity has slowed and downside risks are significant,â the fund said on July 24. Options to support the economy while avoiding the side effects of a credit-fueled stimulus include subsidies for consumption, incentives to reduce pollution and greater spending on a social safety net, the IMF staff wrote.
China is accelerating capital spending in response to the slowdown, and the IMF said its directors expressed concern about the sustainability of âsuch a high level of investment in the context of weak external demand and excess capacity.â The IMF sees gross domestic investment little changed this year at 48.5 percent of GDP.
Gome Electrical Appliances Holding Ltd. (493), Chinaâs second- biggest electronics retailer, warned on July 24 it may post a first-half loss as revenue declined and its e-commerce unit was unprofitable. Gome and larger Suning Appliance Co. last year benefited from government subsidies on home-appliance purchases.
To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zheng Lifei in Beijing at lzheng32@bloomberg.net; Sandrine Rastello in Washington at srastello@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chris Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net; Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net
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